Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable Future, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 111 Market Place, Suite 840, Baltimore, MD, 21202, USA.
Department of Environmental Health & Engineering, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe St., Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA.
Global Health. 2019 Jun 13;15(1):40. doi: 10.1186/s12992-019-0479-5.
Industrial food animal production (IFAP) is characterized by dense animal housing, high throughput, specialization, vertical integration, and corporate consolidation. Research in high-income countries has documented impacts on public health, the environment, and animal welfare. IFAP is proliferating in some low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), where increased consumption of animal-source foods has occurred alongside rising incomes and efforts to address undernutrition. However, in these countries IFAP's negative externalities could be amplified by inadequate infrastructure and resources to document issues and implement controls.
Using UN FAOSTAT data, we selected ten LMICs where food animal production is expanding and assessed patterns of IFAP growth. We conducted a mixed methods review to explore factors affecting growth, evidence of impacts, and information gaps; we searched several databases for sources in English, Spanish, and Portuguese. Data were extracted from 450+ sources, comprising peer-reviewed literature, government documents, NGO reports, and news articles.
In the selected LMICs, not only has livestock production increased, but the nature of expansion appears to have involved industrialized methods, to varying extents based on species and location. Expansion was promoted in some countries by explicit government policies. Animal densities, corporate structure, and pharmaceutical reliance in some areas mirrored conditions found in high-income countries. There were many reported weaknesses in regulation and capacity for enforcement surrounding production and animal welfare. Global trade increasingly influences movement of and access to inputs such as feed. There was a nascent, compelling body of scientific literature documenting IFAP's negative environmental and public health externalities in some countries.
LMICs may be attracted to IFAP for economic development and food security, as well as the potential for increasing access to animal-source foods and the role these foods can play in alleviating undernutrition. IFAP, however, is resource intensive. Industrialized production methods likely result in serious negative public health, environmental, and animal welfare impacts in LMICs. To our knowledge, this is the first systematic effort to assess IFAP trends through an environmental public health lens for a relatively large group of LMICs. It contributes to the literature by outlining urgent research priorities aimed at informing national and international decisions about the future of food animal production and efforts to tackle global undernutrition.
工业食品动物生产(IFAP)的特点是密集的动物饲养、高吞吐量、专业化、垂直整合和公司合并。高收入国家的研究记录了对公共卫生、环境和动物福利的影响。IFAP 在一些低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)正在扩散,这些国家的动物源食品消费增加,收入增加,努力解决营养不良问题。然而,在这些国家,基础设施和资源不足,无法记录问题和实施控制,IFAP 的负面外部性可能会放大。
我们使用联合国粮食及农业组织(FAOSTAT)的数据,选择了十个食品动物生产正在扩张的 LMICs,并评估了 IFAP 增长的模式。我们进行了一项混合方法综述,以探讨影响增长的因素、影响的证据和信息差距;我们在几个数据库中搜索了英文、西班牙文和葡萄牙文的来源。从 450 多个来源中提取了数据,包括同行评议文献、政府文件、非政府组织报告和新闻文章。
在所选择的 LMICs 中,不仅畜牧业生产增加了,而且扩张的性质似乎在不同程度上涉及到工业化方法,具体取决于物种和地点。在一些国家,政府政策明确推动了扩张。在一些地区,动物密度、公司结构和对药物的依赖反映了高收入国家的情况。在生产和动物福利方面,监管和执法能力存在许多报告的弱点。全球贸易越来越多地影响着投入品(如饲料)的流动和获取。在一些国家,有一个新的、引人注目的科学文献体记录了 IFAP 的负面环境和公共卫生外部性。
LMICs 可能会被 IFAP 吸引,以实现经济发展和粮食安全,以及增加动物源食品的获取和这些食品在缓解营养不良方面的作用。然而,IFAP 是资源密集型的。工业化生产方法可能会在 LMICs 中导致严重的负面公共卫生、环境和动物福利影响。据我们所知,这是首次从环境公共卫生角度评估相对较大一组 LMICs 中 IFAP 趋势的系统努力。它通过概述旨在为食品动物生产的未来和解决全球营养不良问题的国家和国际决策提供信息的紧急研究优先事项,为文献做出了贡献。